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L.D. 50 is the debut studio album by American heavy metal band Mudvayne.Released on August 22, 2000, [1] it is the band's first release on Epic Records, following the independently-released extended play Kill, I Oughtta.
For its self-titled fifth album, Mudvayne hoped to create a "white album", describing its cover art. [18] The album, printed with blacklight paint, was only visible under a black light (a light whose wavelength is primarily ultraviolet). [37] Mudvayne was recorded in the summer of 2008 [38] and released in 2009.
The band became popular playing there in the underground music scene in the late 1990s, and released an extended play, Kill, I Oughtta (1997), and a successful debut album, L.D. 50 (2000). Mudvayne achieved worldwide critical and commercial success with The End of All Things to Come (2002), Lost and Found (2005), The New Game (2008), and ...
The End of All Things to Come is the second studio album by American heavy metal band Mudvayne.Released on November 19, 2002, the album expanded upon the sound of the band's first album, L.D. 50, with a more versatile range of sounds, dynamic, moods and vocalization.
Lost and Found is the third studio album by American heavy metal band Mudvayne. The album was released on April 12, 2005. The album had major success in the U.S., debuting at number 2 [7] and being certified gold by the RIAA shortly afterward. [8] It has sold about 1,000,000 copies as of August 2014 and is the band's most successful album to date.
"Dig" is a song by American heavy metal band Mudvayne, released in 2000 as the band's debut single. It appears on the band's debut studio album L.D. 50 (2000). A music video was released for the song on April 10, 2001, and it later won the first ever MTV2 Award.
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Kill, I Oughtta was issued by Epic Records under the title The Beginning of All Things to End on November 20, 2001, which features three bonus tracks, including remixes of "Dig", and "L.D. 50", a 17-minute sound collage which originally appeared as interludes on the album of the same name.